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Electrochemistry
Software ELECTROCHEMIST.com 5.8
Electrochemical
simulation and data analysis
DrHuang.com
Phone: (61 2) 9662 0516
Fax: (61 2) 9662 0516
mailto:info@electrochem.net
DrHuang@DrHuang.com
www.electrochemistrySoftware.com
Copyright @ 1990-2007
March 23, 2008
Contents
Chapter 2
Polarography and Voltammetry
2.2 Direct
Current Polarography
2.3 Linear
Sweep Voltammetry and Cyclic Voltammetry
2.5 Differential
Staircase Voltammetry
2.6 Alternating
Current Voltammetry
2.8 Additive Square Wave Voltammetry
2.10 Reverse Pulse Voltammetry
2.11 Differential
Pulse Voltammetry
2.12 Pseudo-Derivative
Normal Pulse Voltammetry
6.1 Simulating over
30 Factors
6.1.2
Effect of Hydrogen Ion Number
6.1.3
Effect of Reactant and Product Numbers
6.1.4
Effect of Electron Number
6.1.5.1
Effect of Electrode Geometry
6.1.5.2
Effect of Microelectrode
6.1.5.3
Effect of Electrode Area
6.1.5.4
Effect of Electrode Rotating Speed
6.1.5.5
Effect of Thin Film or Surface
Modified Electrode
6.1.6.2
Effect of Scan Direction
6.1.7
Effect of Preconcentration
6.1.7.1
Effect of Preconcentration Time
6.1.7.2
Effect of Preconcentration Potential
6.1.9.1
Effect of Pulse Height
6.1.10
Effect of Sampling Time
6.1.12
Effect of Diffusion Coefficient
6.1.13
Effect of Catalytic Reaction
6.1.13.1
Effect of Catalytic Reaction Rate
6.1.13.2
Effect of Concentration of Catalyst
6.1.15
Effect of Chemical Reaction Rate
6.1.16
Effect of Heterogeneous Standard Rate.
6.1.17.1
Effect of Adsorption Coefficient
6.1.17.2
Effect of Concentration
6.1.18
Effect of Electron Transfer Coefficient
6.1.22
Effect of Double Layer Capacitance
6.5
Calculating Theoretical Limiting Current
6.6
Extracting Parameters by Curve Fitting.
6.6.1
Fitting to Simulation Curve
6.6.2
Fitting to Experimental Curve
6.7 Separating Overlapped Peaks
6.8 Separating Faradic Current From Background
Current
Chapter 7 How Do
You Know It Is Right?
Chapter 8 Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Software ELECTROCHEMIST.com (former Polar
and Polarograph) is virtual electrochemist
who can analyse and simulate electrochemical experiments. It simulates
It also
simulates the effects to change over 30 parameters, e.g. charge current,
resistance, noise, preconcentration time and potential, convection, pH, the reactant and product numbers, etc. This
software provides five ways to check accuracy of simulation. It calculates over 1000 types
of theoretical peak values.
It plots and analyses any x-y data for peak location, peak height, peak width,
semi-derivative, semi-integral, derivative, integral, convolution,
deconvolution, curve fitting, and separating overlapped peaks and background
current.
It shows tip when the user put mouse cursor over a label. The program can separate overlapped voltammograms into individuals, and extract real peak from voltammogram with noise and baseline. It outputs the theoretical peak values, the peak current and potential and current-potential data, which can be imported into other program (e.g. Spreadsheet). Users can copy-and-paste the voltammogram into his document.
It has been successfully applied to fit experimental polarograms (voltammograms) of In(III), Cd(II), Pb(II), Tl(I), Cr(III), Zn(II), and binuclear copper complex in aqueous and non-aqueous media at mercury, solid metal and non-metal electrodes (specifically the dropping mercury, hanging mercury drop, gold, platinum and glassy carbon electrodes) by various electrochemical techniques (differential pulse, square wave, and pseudo-derivative normal pulse polarographies) [1-5].
It is available from the author or my Web site. If you have any question, please read FAQ in its document. For tutorial, please read the course practices in the rmit.htm file.
It is assumed that you agree the Shareware license that you should register by $10 to author in 20 days or you should delete it.
Modern
electrochemical methods offer the analytical chemist a wide variety of
techniques to solve analytical problems. Voltammetry is one such method, in
which the current is measured as a function of applied potential. Polarography
is another method, which differs from voltammetry in that it employs a dropping
mercury electrode (DME) to continuously renew the electrode surface.
In
this chapter, the fundamental principles of popular electrochemical techniques, e.g. direct current polarography (DCP),
alternating current polarography (ACP), square wave polarography (SWP), normal
pulse polarography (NPP), differential pulse polarography (DPP),
pseudo-derivative normal pulse polarography (PDNPP), Linear sweep voltammetry (LSV) and stripping
voltammetry (SV), are reviewed. Much
of this theory is also applicable to voltammetry. If you are familiar with
polarography and voltammetry, they can move directly to the next chapter.
Beside
techniques, theoretical equations also depend on mechanism and electrode
geometry. E.g. for 8 techniques, 15 mechanisms and 10 electrode geometries, we
need 8x15x10=1200 theoretical
equations. There are more than 1000 theoretical equations for analytical simulation and theoretical peak current and
potential in this software. You
can calculate the peak (or limiting)
current and potential from the
theoretical equations by clicking on the
Heyrovsky
invented the original polarographic method, conventional direct current
polarography (DCP), and Heyrovsky and Shikata constructed the first polarograph
in 1925 [6]. DCP involves the measurement of current flowing through the
dropping mercury electrode (DME) as a function of applied potential. Under the
influence of gravity, mercury drops grow from the end of a fine glass capillary
until they detach. Then the process is allowed to repeat itself. Drops may be
allowed to fall naturally or may be dislodged after a specified interval with
the aid of a mechanical device. A major advantage of the DME is that a
constantly renewed electrode surface is exposed to the test solution so that
problems of electrode blockage are avoided. Another advantage of the DME is
that it allows a number of electrode reduction processes to be monitored, which
would otherwise be inaccessible, because a wide negative potential region is
available on account of the high overpotential for water reduction.
If an electroactive species is
capable of undergoing a redox process at the DME, then an S-shaped
current-potential relation is usually observed. This is called a polarographic
wave. Figure 1.1 illustrates the response obtained from a reduction reaction
where the current (i) increases over a particular potential (E) range until it
reaches a limiting value. The limiting current is the diffusion-controlled
limiting current (id).
This id is of interest in analytical measurements
as it is proportional to the concentration of reactant. For a charge
reaction
A + ne
= B
Ilkovic [4] first put the measurement of this current on a theoretical basis, and his equation is [4-6]
id = (7/3)1/2
(36 p)1/6 r2/3
nF D1/2 m2/3 td1/6 C (2.1)
where r
is the density of mercury, n is the number of electrons, F is Faraday's constant, D is the diffusion coefficient, m
is the flow rate of mercury, td is the drop time, and C is the concentration of the electroactive
species in the bulk solution.

For
a planar electrode,
id = nFAD1/2 C / (p td ) 1/2 (2.2)
For
a spherical electrode with radius r,
id = id(planar)+nFADC
/ r = nFAD1/2
C/(p td )1/2 (1+ (p td D)1/2 / r ) (2.3)
For
a microelectrode, a steady-state current is
id = GnFA1/2 DC (2.4)
where G is an electrode geometry constant,
only depending on electrode geometry.
For
a microdisc electrode, G=4/(p) ½
id =4/(p) ½ nFA1/2 DC = 4nFDC r
For
a microsphere electrode, G=2p ½
id = 2p ½ nFA1/2 DC = 4pnFDC r
For
a microhemisphere electrode, G=p ½
id = p ½ nFA1/2 DC = 2pnFDC r
The
half-wave potential E1/2
is another important parameter of the DC polarogram. This is the potential at
which the current reaches half of its limiting value (Figure 1.1). The value of
half-wave potential is usually independent of concentration and is characteristic
of the electroactive species. Therefore it can be used for qualitative
characterization of the species, and is the foundation of qualitative analysis.
The
shape of the DC polarogram is also very important to the overall
characterization of the electrode process. If the reduction reaction is
reversible and controlled by diffusion, the potential (E) is related to the
concentrations of reactant and product by the Nernst equation [7]:
E = E° + (RT/nF) ln( CO(0)/CR(0) ) (2.5)
where E° is the standard redox potential,
R is a gas constant, T is temperature, CO(0) and CR(0) are the surface concentrations of species Ox and
Red, respectively. The shape of the DC polarographic wave is then derived by
combining the Nernst and Ilkovic equations as follows [8, 9]
E = E1/2 + (RT/nF) ln( (id - i)/i )
or
i = id / [1 + exp( (nF/RT) (E - E1/2))] (2.6)
where
E1/2 = E° + (RT/2nF) ln( DR/DO ) (2.7)
Since
the diffusion coefficients of oxidized and reduced forms, DO and DR, are often almost equal, then E1/2 = E°. When i = id /2, then E = E1/2.
Equation
(2.6) is the Heyrovsky-Ilkovic equation, and is often used in investigations
into the nature of electrode processes. However, an experimental DC polarogram
also shows the oscillatory behavior of the current due to the growth and fall
of the mercury drop, and this is superimposed on the DC behaviour. This
invariably causes problems in the measurement of wave heights and/or half-wave
potentials, and of course has deleterious effects on measures of analytical
performance, especially sensitivity and resolution. Despite these problems, the
DME remains popular because of its constantly renewed surface.
Linear
sweep voltammetry (LSV) is performed by applying a linear potential ramp in the
same manner as DCP. However, with LSV the potential scan rate is usually much
faster than with DCP. When the reduction potential of the analyte is
approached, the current begins to flow. The current increases in response to
the increasing potential. However, as the reduction proceeds, a diffusion layer
is formed and the rate of the electrode reduction becomes diffusion limited. At
this point the current slowly declines. The result is the asymmetric
peak-shaped I-E curve, as in Figure 1.3.

For a reversible reaction at a planar electrode, the peak current is
Ip = 0.4463 AC (nF) 3/2 (vD/(RT))1/2 (2.8)
The peak potential is
Ep = E1/2 – 1.109 RT/(nF) = E1/2 – 28.5/n (mV) at 25 °C (2.9)
The half-peak potential is
Ep/2 = E1/2 + 1.09 RT/(nF) (2.10)
The difference between peak potential and half-peak potential, similar to the half-peak width, is
| Ep - Ep/2 | = 2.2 RT/(nF) = 56.5/n (mV) at 25 °C (2.11)
Cyclic voltammetry is similar to linear sweep voltammetry except for the potential scans from the starting potential to the end potential, then reverse from the end potential back to the starting potential. Cyclic voltammetry is perhaps the most widely used electrochemical technique, and is frequently used for the characterization of a redox system. It can provide information about the number of redox states, as well as qualitative information about the stability of these oxidation states and the electron transfer kinetics. There are also simple models that can be used to calculate the rate of electron transfer (represented by ks) and the rate of chemical reactions coupled to the electron transfer for simple systems (those where the cyclic voltammetric behavior is controlled by only one of these parameters). However, these simple models cannot be used for more complicated systems, since the effects of, for example, slow electron transfer kinetics and a coupled chemical reaction cannot be readily separated. This simulation software can help quantitative studies (e.g., mechanistic investigations) in cyclic voltammetry, so it can be useful for investigating the electrochemical mechanisms of real redox systems. The difference between two peak potentials is
DEp =| Epa - Epc | = 2.3 RT/(nF) = 58/n (mV) at 25 °C (2.12)
E1/2 = (Epa + Epc )/2
For a non-reversible reaction, DEp becomes larger.
For
a microdisk electrode, its steady-state current is the same as the eq. (2.4). Cyclic voltammetric responses
at a disk microelectrode can be approximated in simulation by using a hemispherical
electrode of the appropriate radius rh=2rd/p, where rd is
the radius of the disk microelectrode; the CV responses at a band electrode can be approximated
using a hemicylindrical electrode
of the appropriate radius rh=w/4, where w is width of the
band electrode.
The rotating-disk
electrode was developed following the mathematical solution given by Levich of
the hydrodynamic equations describing the rate of transfer of substance in
solution to a rotating disk surface, in terms of the angular velocity of
rotation
(
, N
in rps), the diffusion coefficient D, the concentration C0 of the
substance and the kinematical viscosity
of the solution. For the case when the
reaction is relatively fast and the current is determined by mass transport,
the corresponding equation for the limiting current density
,
developed by Levich, is:
![]()
where
is in A/cm2, D in cm2/s,
in cm2/s ,
in
rad/s and C0 in mol/cm3. In such a case the limiting
current is independent of potential over a wide range. This range of potential
is limited at one end by the reversible potential and a small overpotential
needed to drive even a very fast reaction to mass-transport limitation and at
the other end by another reaction which may take place, usually the evolution
or oxygen or hydrogen in aqueous solutions.
Staircase Voltammetry (SV) is similar to linear
scan voltammetry. It scans by
staircase potentials, instead of linear potential. When a potential step is
very small, it is the almost same as linear scan voltammetry. But you have
choice to change the sampling time.
Differential Staircase Voltammetry (DSV) is similar to
staircase voltammetry. Two
currents are sampled at the beginning and the end of the staircase. When the difference between the two
current samples is plotted as a function of the applied ramp voltage, a
peak-shaped current response is shown.
A
number of modifications to DCP have improved its analytical performance. One of
them is alternating current voltammetry (ACV). It
is the result of superimposing a small amplitude sinusoidal potential (DE) with a fixed
frequency (w) on a slowly scanning DC ramp, as (c) in
Figure 1.2. The applied potential is then given by summing the AC and DC
components. Finally, the alternating current (AC) is measured as a function of
DC potential. In particular, the amplitude of the AC current vs. the DC
potential is plotted, as (g) in Figure 1.2. The current-potential (I-E) curve
for a reversible reaction follows the equation [6]
I = n2F2 AC
DE (wD)1/2 sech2
[(nF/2RT)(E - E1/2)] /(4RT) (2.13)
At a peak, sech()=1, then the above equation reduces
to
Ip = n2F2 AC DE (wD)1/2/(4RT) (2.14)
It
may be deduced from this equation that the amplitude of the AC component of the
Faradic current (I) is peak-shaped. Moreover, the peak current is a linear
function of concentration and therefore may be used in analytical applications.
Like the half-wave potential E1/2 in DCP, the peak potential Ep in ACP is characteristic of the electroactive
species. Also, the half-peak width (i.e. the width of the peak at half its
height, W1/2) is [6]
W1/2 = 3.52 RT/(nF) = 90/n mV at 25 °C. (2.15)
Square
wave voltammetry (SWV)
uses a small amplitude square wave voltage in place of the sinusoidal one used
in ACP. Its potential waveform is shown in (d) of Figure 1.2. The current is
sampled near the end of each square wave half cycle, to minimize double-layer
charging effects, and the I-E response is obtained by plotting the differences
in current between successive half cycles. For reversible electrode processes, the
I-E curve for SWP is similar to that in ACP [6], so its properties, including
the half-peak width W1/2
and resolution, are obviously akin to ACP.
Additive square wave polarography (ASWP) uses a small amplitude square wave
voltage in the same as one used
in SWP, but its total current is sum of the
positive and negative pulses currents, instead of difference of the positive
and negative pulses currents. Because its two charge currents by the positive
and negative pulses are opposite, it is possible to select suitable sample time
to make its charge currents offset to zero.
A charge current by a positive pulse is
Ic(t1)
= (Ej-1 – Ej)exp(-t1/RC)= -(Es+Ep)exp(-t1/RC)
where t1 is a
sampling time at a positive pulse, R is resistance, C is double layer capacitance, Es is potential step, Ep is pulse potential.
A charge current
by a negative pulse is
Ic(t2)
= (Ej – Ej+1)exp(-t2/RC)= Ep exp(-t2/RC)
Total charge
current is
Ic =
Ic (t1)+ Ic (t2)
By setting Ic
=0, a solution for the sampling time is
t2 = t1 - RC
ln(Es/Ep+1)
It can show in dimensionless
sampling time by division of the pulse time tp:
T2 = T1 – RC/tp
ln(Es/Ep+1)
According to
this equation, select sampling time t2 different from t1 to offset charge
current to zero.
The
pulse voltammetry including normal pulse voltammetry (NPV) and differential pulse voltammetry (DPV) stem from Barker's original work on
square wave voltammetry [6]. The increased sensitivity of these techniques over
DCP arises from their ability to discriminate against the charging current by
measuring the total current after the charging current has decayed to values
substantially less than the Faradic current.
The
potential-time waveform used in NPP is presented as (a) in Figure 1.2. At the
beginning of the potential sweep, the electrode is held at an initial potential
where no Faradic current flows.
Potential pulses of increasing amplitude are then applied to the
electrode at regular intervals. The potential pulses are about 50 ms in
duration and the current is measured at a time near the end of each pulse. A
potential pulse is ended by a return to the initial potential and the drop is
dislodged. The whole process is repeated except a few millivolts are added to
the potential pulse in next cycle. A normal pulse polarogram is shown as (e) of
Figure 1.2. The shape of the normal
pulse polarogram is sigmoidal, looking similar to the shape of a DC polarogram,
and indeed it can be described by a current-potential equation similar to that
in DCP [6].
For
a planar electrode, its limiting current is similar to one of DCV:
id = nFAD1/2 C / (p tp ) 1/2 (2.16)
For
a spherical electrode with radius r,
id = id(planar)
+ nFADC / r = nFAD1/2
C (1/ (p
tp ) 1/2 + D1/2 /r ) (2.17)
Reverse Pulse Voltammetry is similar
to normal pulse voltammetry, but its start potential is negative and its pulse
is positive as opposite to normal pulse voltammetry.
Normal
pulse voltammetry gives improved sensitivity by avoiding most of the charging
current by sampling the total current as late as possible after the application
of each potential pulse. However, there still is the charging current to some
extent. Another defect of NPP is poor resolution between neighbouring wave
because of drawn-out sigmoidal I-E response. Differential pulse polarography
(DPP) was designed to overcome these problems by arranging a charging current
of smaller magnitude, and by producing a peak-shaped I-E curve.
The
potential-time waveform used in DPV is shown as (b) of Figure 1.2. A voltage ramp is applied to the
electrode as in the DCP, and a small amplitude potential pulse (DE) is added to
the voltage towards the end of each drop's life. Two currents are measured
before applying the pulse and at the end of the pulse. When the difference
between the two current samples is plotted as a function of the applied ramp
voltage, a peak-shaped current response is shown.
The
peak-shaped I-E curve allows polarographic responses in close proximity to each
other to be more clearly resolved than in either DCP or NPV. The I-E curve for all values of the
pulse amplitude is described by [6]
I = nFAC (D/ p tp)1/2 P (s2-1)/[(s+P)(1+Ps)] (2.18)
where
s = exp(nFDE/(2RT)) (2.19)
P = exp[(nF/(RT))(E - E1/2 + DE/2)] (2.20)
At a peak, P=1, then the current equation reduces to
Ip = nFAC (D/ p tp)1/2 (s -1)/(1+s) (2.21)
Ep = E1/2 - DE/2 (2.22)
The half-peak width is a very important
parameter in resolution. The half-peak width W1/2 is a function of the pulse amplitude as follows [6]
W1/2 = 2RT/(nF) cosh-1[2 + cosh(nFDE/(2RT))] (2.23)
For large values of |DE| (say |DE| > 200/n mV), W1/2 approaches to |DE|, and for small values of |DE| (e.g. |DE| < 20/n mV), this
equation reduces to equation (2.15).
Unfortunately,
the above theoretical equations are derived by neglecting the DC effect in DPP,
and although this is not a problem when the ratio of the drop time to the pulse
time is larger than 50, the resulting distortion makes the theoretical
treatment complicated, especially for a non-reversible reaction.
DPV is a very sensitive electroanalytical
technique due to the effective discrimination against the charging current.
However, DPV has two problems
associated with the slowly increasing DC ramp. As the DC ramp progresses,
filming may occur on the surface of the electrode if species form insoluble
mercury compounds [6]. Since the characteristics of the electrode are changed
by such a film, the current may not correspond to the simple theory. Another
problem is that the theory itself is complicated by the effect of the DC ramp.
NPP avoids these two problems. But the disadvantage of NPV is its poor resolution because of the
sigmoidal wave. To overcome this shortcoming, NPV polarograms can be differentiated to produce
peak-shaped responses, and thus combine the best features of both DPV and NPV while avoiding some of their limitations. This
pseudo-derivative normal pulse polarography (PDNPV) nevertheless is not sensitive as DPV.
The
potential-time waveform in PDNPV
is as in NPV, but the current
data of PDNPV are displayed in a
difference mode. The current is subtracted from those for the following pulses,
and the difference is plotted as a function of potential, as in DPV.
The
theoretical treatment of PDNPV
is simple and easy. The reversible current-potential equation is similar to
that of DPV except for the DC
term [6]. The half-peak width or resolution is akin to that of DPV.
Stripping
voltammetry involves three main steps: electrodeposition (preconcentration),
equilibration, and stripping. The first step is to concentrate the analyte from
the dilute test solution into or onto the electrode at negative reduction (or
positive oxidation) potentials, usually accompanied by stirring. The second
step is to leave the solution to settle down. The third step is then to strip
the preconcentrated analyte from the electrode back into the solution by using
one of the polarographic techniques described above. A major advantage of this
method is its extremely sensitivity, in the concentration range of 10-6
- 10-12 M. This is because the concentration of the analyte on the
electrode is 100-1000 times greater than that in the starting solution [6].
This software analytically and digitally simulates voltammetry and chronoamperometry on virtually any mechanism in 4 models at over 10 electrode geometries by virtual any waveform techniques, calculates their theoretical peak current and potential, retrieve parameters by curve fitting, and separate overlapped peaks and baseline. </big>
·
Digital simulation
Flexible for any mechanism up to second-order chemical reaction and adsorption by virtual any waveform techniques.
You can type your mechanism and chemical symbols, and design or import any waveform. An implicit finite
difference algorithm is used.
·
Analytical simulation
No divergence problem in simulation. No overflow problem in simulation. Fast
simulation.
·
Design or import any waveform
Linear sweep, CV, DC, normal pulse, reverse normal pulse, differential
pulse, square wave,
additive square wave, staircase voltammetry. Multi-cyclic voltammetry, cyclic normal pulse, cyclic
differential pulse, cyclic square wave, cyclic additive square wave, cyclic staircase voltammetry, differential staircase voltammetry, chronoamperometry,
chronocoulometry, user-design waveform
chronoamperometry and voltammetry.
·
Chemical Reaction Rate up
to 10e300
·
Surface concentrations
show what happen each species in the electrode surface, check accuracy of simulation, convert
surface concentration to current or current to surface concentration..
·
Conversion between surface concentration and
current
Convert surface concentration to current or current to surface concentration to
check accuracy of simulation.
·
Over 1000 type of theoretical peak values
It calculates theoretical peak values by theoretical equations and compare your data
with theoretical peak values to see if your experimental conditions reach upper
or lower theoretical limit.
·
Over 30 factors
Simulate over 30 effect factors, e.g. noise, charge current, resistance, preconcentration time and potential, convection, pH, reactant number, product number, electron number, electrode geometries, electrode size, electrode rotating speed, scan rate, concentration, pulse height, pulse width, sampling time, scan direction, scan cycle, diffusion coefficient, drop time, standard redox potentials, rate of electron transfer, transfer coefficient, diffusion coefficient, temperature, electrode area, and experimental parameters, forward and reverse chemical reaction rate constants up to 10e300, etc.
·
Separating overlapped peaks
Manually and auto separates overlapped peaks into individuals, and extract real
peak from voltammogram with noise and baseline. So you can exactly determine
peaks and check accuracy of simulation.
·
Preconcentration
Change preconcentration conditions for stripping
voltammetry.
·
Pre-equilibration
Calculate the concentration at equilibrium.
·
Curve fitting
Manually and auto fits the simulated voltammograms into experimental data, and
extracts kinetic parameters from experimental data. Curve fitting to any
electrochemical parameter is easy by click to select that parameter.
·
Import and export data
Import parameters,
waveform and current data from a text file. Copy-and-paste
the simulated voltammogram into your document. Export the simulated data into
your favor program (e.g. MS Excel).
·
Data Analysis
Derivative, integral, semi-derivative, semi-integral, convolution, deconvolution, Tafel analysis, convolution analysis. Semi-derivative is useful for CV. It can change a shape of reversible CV into symmetric peak, so easy to determine peak.
·
Over 10 electrode
geometries
Planar, spherical, semi-spherical, cylindrical, semi-cylindrical,
band, microdisk, thin film, disk, ring electrode, and rotating all these electrodes.
·
Check accuracy
of simulation
Provide five ways to check accuracy
of simulation.
·
Tips
Show tips for help when you put mouse cursor over a label.
Table 1 Feature
|
Version |
Shareware |
Student |
Teacher |
Academics |
Professional |
Competitor |
|
Digital simulation |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
|
Analytical simulation |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Theoretical peak |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Adsorption reaction |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Surface concentration |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Convert surface concentration to current |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Convert current to surface concentration |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Any species symbol |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Tips |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Import and
export current |
n |
n |
y |
y |
y |
y |
|
Import waveform |
n |
n |
n |
n |
y |
n |
|
Show pulse current |
n |
n |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
No. Of charge reaction |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
y |
|
No. Of chemical reaction |
0 |
2 |
4 |
6 |
9 |
y |
|
Techniques: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
LSV and CV |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
|
DC |
n |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Normal pulse |
n |
n |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Reverse Pulse |
n |
n |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Differential pulse |
n |
n |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Cyclic diff. pulse |
n |
n |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Square wave |
n |
n |
n |
y |
y |
n |
|
Cyclic square wave |
n |
n |
n |
y |
y |
n |
|
Additive square wave |
n |
n |
n |
y |
y |
n |
|
Staircase |
n |
n |
n |
y |
y |
n |
|
Potential step |
n |
n |
n |
n |
y |
n |
|
Design waveform |
n |
n |
n |
n |
y |
n |
|
Import waveform |
n |
n |
n |
n |
y |
n |
|
Effect: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adsorption |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Convection |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Noise |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Charge current |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
|
Resistance |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
|
Reactant number |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Product number |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Preconcentration time |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Preconcentration potential |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Pre-equilibration |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
|
pH |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Negative electron number |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Fractal electron number |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Pulse height |
n |
n |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Pulse width |
n |
n |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
First sampling time |
n |
n |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Second sampling time |
n |
n |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Analysis: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Differentiate |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Integrate |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Semi-differentiate |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Semi-integrate |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Manual fit |
n |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Auto fit |
n |
n |
n |
y |
y |
y |
|
Manual separate |
n |
n |
n |
n |
y |
n |
|
Auto separate |
n |
n |
n |
n |
y |
n |
|
Electrode: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Planar |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
|
(Micro) spherical |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
|
(Micro) hemispherical |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
|
(Micro) cylindrical |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
|
Rotating cylindrical |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Rotating hemispherical |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Microdisc |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Band |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Thin film |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Rotating disc |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Ring |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
|
Rotating ring |
y |
y |
y |
y |
y |
n |
Note: y = yes, n = no. Feature may be changed without notice.
File menu
· Open Parameter submenu
Open a
file of parameters and read parameters back. You can continue your simulation
of last time or repeat other people’s simulation. The Plot window title will show the file
name.
·
Open Waveform submenu
Read waveform data from a file and show the waveform. The Plot window title will show
the file name. If technique is 9) Design
waveform, then it writes a few design points back to the Design Waveform panel.
·
Open Current submenu
Read current data from a file and show curves. The Plot window title will show
the file name.
·
Save Parameter submenu
Save experimental parameters into a text file. You can give it to other people
to repeat.
·
Save Waveform submenu
Save waveform to a file as text file. E.g. if you save data as the .csv
file, you can load it into MS Excel by double-clicking the .csv file. If
technique is 9) Design waveform,
then it saves a few design points from the Design
Waveform panel, otherwise it saves
every point of waveform.
·
Save Current submenu
Save current data as a text file. E.g. if you save data as the .csv file,
you can load it into MS Excel by double-clicking the .csv file.
· Save Graph submenu
Save a graph to a file as .bmp file. You can use the PAINT program to save it as .gif file to show on Internet.
·
Copy To Clipboard submenu
Copy a graph into clipboard, so you can paste the graph into your document.
·
Print submenu
Print graph.
· Exit submenu
Input menu
· Technique submenu
Open a window to select one of 9 techniques. The default technique is LSV and CV.
· Instrument submenu
Open a window to change instrument parameters. You can click the Reset button to use the default values.
· Mechanism submenu
Open a window to input your mechanism and species symbol in Digital simulation, or choose a predefined mechanism in Analytical simulation. The default mechanism is Fe3+ + e = Fe2+.
· Kinetics submenu
Open a window to change kinetic parameters. You can use the default values without any change.
· Concentration submenu
Open a window to change concentration, diffusion coefficient, adsorption coefficient and maximum adsorption amount of species.
Run menu
·
Simulate submenu
Run simulation, and show curves on a Plot window. You can click on any
point of curve to get the x and y values.
·
Manual Fit submenu
Manually fit the simulated curve into experimental curve as you manually change
parameter values.
·
Auto Fit submenu
Automatically fit the simulated curve into experimental data.
·
Manual Separate submenu
Manually separate the overlapped peaks into individuals as you manually change
parameter values.
·
Auto Separate submenu
Automatically separate the overlapped peaks into individuals.
Plot menu
·
i vs. E submenu
Plot current i versus potential E without running simulation.
·
i s vs. E submenu
Plot the sampling currents versus potential E without running simulation. It is
only available for multi-sampling techniques, e.g. pulse.
·
C0 vs. E submenu
Plot surface concentration C0 versus potential E without running simulation.
·
Waveform submenu
Plot potential E versus time t, which is imposed to electrodes in a technique.
· Convert submenu
Convert current into the surface concentration or the surface concentration into current.
·
Convert i to C0 submenu
Convert current into the surface concentration.
·
Convert Co0 and Cr0 to i submenu
Convert surface concentrations of both oxidized and reduced species into current.
·
Convert i1 to C0 for E
mechanism 1 submenu
Convert current to surface concentration of oxidized and reduced species for simple charge reaction mechanism 1 in the Analytical Simulation panel.
· Convert Co0 to i1 for E mechanism 1 submenu
Convert a surface concentration of oxidized species into current for simple charge reaction mechanism 1 in the Analytical Simulation panel.
· Convert Cr0 to i1 for E mechanism 1 submenu
Convert a surface concentration reduced species into current for simple charge reaction mechanism 1 in the Analytical Simulation panel.
·
Convert i8 to C0 for E
mechanism 8 submenu
Convert current to surface concentration of oxidized and reduced species for catalytic reaction mechanism 8 in the Analytical Simulation panel.
· Convert Co0 to i8 for E mechanism 8 submenu
Convert a surface concentration of oxidized species into current for catalytic reaction mechanism 8 in the Analytical Simulation panel.
· Convert Cr0 to i8 for E mechanism 8 submenu
Convert a surface concentration reduced species into current for catalytic reaction mechanism 8 in the Analytical Simulation panel.
· Semi- dy/dt submenu
Semi-differentiate
the y data with time t. Semi-differentiation is the same as deconvolution of current with 1/Ö(pt). Click twice this menu for two
time semi-differentiation, i.e. first order differentiation.
· Semi-integrate submenu
Semi-integrate
the y data with time t. Semi-integrate is the same as convolution of current with 1/Ö(pt). Click twice this menu for two
time semi-integration, i.e. integration.
· dy/dt submenu
Differentiate
the y data with time, dy/dt. Click twice this menu for second order differentiation.
· Integrate submenu
Integrate the y data with time t.
· Smooth submenu
Smooth the y data.
· Log((i lim 1 - i)/(i – i lim 2)) submenu
Tafel
plot. It converts S-shape of curve to a linear line. E.g. it converts DC
voltamogram, convolution of CV into linear lines.
· X Data submenu
Operation on all X data of a curve, e.g. X + constant, X * constant.
·
t as X-axis submenu
Plot time t as X-axis.
·
E as X-axis submenu
Plot potential E as X-axis.
· 0.001X, 0.1X, 10X, 1000X submenus
Multiply 0.001, 0.1, 10, or 1000 on X data. If your experimental potential data is not in Volt unit, you should convert to Volt unit by this submenu.
· X data reverse submenu
Reverse the order of data.
· Y Data submenu
Operation on all Y data of a curve, e.g. addition and subtraction of curves, Y1 + Y2, Y2 – Y1, Y + constant, Y * constant.
-Y,
0.001Y, 0.1Y, 10Y, 1000Y submenus
Multiply –1, 0.001, 0.1, 10, or 1000 on Y data. If your experimental current data is not in Amp unit, you should convert to Amp unit by this submenu.
·
Option submenu
Change the
plot options, color, line style, etc.
Analyze menu
·
Find the peak
height, location,
left and right sides half peak width, and width of
curves of the peak shape. After open a window, you can copy the result by right click mouse.
· Find Halfwave E submenu
Find the half wave potential and limiting current of curves of the S shape.
·
Calculate the
theoretical peak
potential, peak current, left side half peak width, right side half
peak width and half peak width from
theoretical equations. Select a mechanism from Analytical Simulation in the
Mechanism window
before you click this menu. This
submenu is active for Analytical Simulation only.
·
Curve Number submenu
Show current curve number. So you can analyze this curve.
·
Next Curve Number submenu
Go to next curve number. So you can analyze this curve.
· Time submenu
Display the simulation time and curve-fitting results.
Help menu
·
Logon submenu
Logon to activate menus by input of password.
·
Manual submenu
Display this manual.
· Home Page submenu
· About submenu
Show version number and ID of this software.
Some menus will be activated only after you click the Simulate submenu or load data because they require data.
This menu has five submenus.</big>
Basic
Techniques:
1) Linear sweep and cyclic voltammetry and
chronoamperometry.
2) DC voltammetry and chronoamperometry.
3)
4) Differential pulse voltammetry and chronoamperometry.
5) Square wave voltammetry and chronoamperometry.
6) Additive square wave voltammetry and chronoamperometry.
7) Staircase voltammetry and chronoamperometry.
8) Potential step chronoamperometry:
single, double, and triple steps.
9) Design waveform
10)
Import waveform
You can design your waveform in the Design Waveform section of the Instrument
window. You can
import your waveform data from a file by the Open menu of the File
menu.
You plot the time t as X-axis for
chronoamperometry, and the potential E as X-axis for voltammetry.
By data analysis, you can extend above
techniques to more techniques, e.g.
integrating chronoamperometric current leads to chronocoulometry, and
convoluting CV leads to convolution voltammetry.
Extended Techniques:
1. Chronocoulometry:
by integrating chronoamperometric current.
2. Convolution voltammetry: by convoluting CV.
3. Differential, semi-differential and semi-integration voltammetry: by differencing,
semi-differencing and semi-integrating CV.
4. Anode and cathode
stripping voltammetry.
5. Differential staircase voltammetry: produce 2 staircase currents at different sampling times in the
same window with overlap, and then click the Y2-Y1 menu of the Y Data menu in the Analyze menu.
6. Multi cyclic voltammetry of all above voltammetry.
You can see their waveform that is applied to electrodes by click on the Waveform menu of the Plot menu.
This Instrument window is used to define the parameters of the instrument in experiment as follows:
5.2.1 Instrumental Parameters panel:
E
start: starting potential (V).
E end: ending potential (V).
E step: step potential (V).
v: scan rate (V/s). For square wave voltammetry, v=E step/t pulse.
E pulse: pulse potential (V).
T: temperature (°C).
t pulse: pulse time or pulse width for pulse voltammetry (s).
t drop: mercury dropping time or pulse length in pulse voltammetry (s).
Noise: noise signal (A).
ts1: first dimensionless sampling
time, value is from 0.1 to 1. For square wave pulse, it is sampled in first
pulse during of first half square wave. For different pulse, it is sampled in
during before pulse. For normal pulse, it is sampled in pulse during. For staircase,
it is sampled in a staircase during. It is not used for LS and CV. For digital
simulation, you should set the Time Grid Factor in the Digital Simulation
Model section to about 10 before you change the sampling time less than 1.
ts2: second dimensionless sampling
time, value is from 0.1 to 1. For square wave pulse, it is for second opposite
pulse of second half square wave. For different pulse, it is sampled in pulse
during. It is not used for other techniques. For digital simulation, you should
set the Time Grid Factor in the Digital Simulation Model section to
about 10 before you change the sampling time less than 1.
Scan:
Single: single scan.
Cycles: cyclic scan, e.g. cyclic
voltammetry (CV).
2 Cycles: 2-cycle scan.
3 Cycles: 3-cycle scan.
5.2.2 Electrode panel:
1.
Planar: a planar electrode.
2. (Micro) Spherical: a
spherical electrode or micro spherical electrode.
3. (Micro) Hemispherical: a
hemispherical electrode or micro hemispherical electrode.
4. Microdisk: a micro disc
electrode, radius < 1e-4 cm.
5.
(Micro) Cylindrical: a cylindrical electrode or micro cylindrical electrode.
6. (Micro) Hemi cylindrical: a
hemi cylindrical electrode or micro cylindrical electrode.
7. DME: a dropping mercury
electrode.
8. Ring-Disc: ring-disc
electrodes.
9. Thin
film: a thin film electrode, surface modified electrode or thin layer
cell, with finite diffusion.
10. Bond: a bond electrode.
11. Ring: a ring electrode.
All
above electrodes can be rotated.
Area: electrode area (cm2). When you change the value of area,
the value of radius is changed automatically. The default value is 0.01.
Radius: electrode radius (cm). When you change the value of radius, the
value of area is changed automatically.
Length: electrode length for cylindrical electrode or micro cylindrical
electrode (cm).
Ring Radius 2: inner radius of ring electrode (cm).
Ring Radius 3: outer radius of ring electrode (cm).
Thickness: thickness of the polymer or mercury film electrode (cm).
Rotation: electrode rotation rate (rpm). For stationary electrodes, set this value to 0. The default value is 0.
5.2.3 Preconcentration panel:
E
pre: preconcentration potential (V).
R stir: stirring rate (rpm).
Stirring solution.
t pre: preconcentration time (s).
t pre const: preconcentration time
constant (/s).
5.2.4 Baseline panel:
C
dl: double layer capacitance for charge current
(F).
R: resistance (Ohm).
I start: a starting current (A).
I end: an ending current (A).
5.2.5 Digital Simulation Model panel:
Space Grid Factor: space expanding grid factor. Its value is from 0.001 to 0.9. The smaller
value it is, the more accuracy simulation is, but the longer computer time.
Default value is 0.5.
Time
Grid or Step: the
time step in second. The smaller value
it is, the more accuracy simulation is, but the longer computer time. It
depends on techniques. The suggestion value is half pulse width for normal
pulse, staircase, differential pulse, and square wave techniques.
This
section factors are used for digital simulation only, not for analytical
simulation.
The most important three parameters are the
Space grid factor, the Time
Grid and the Potential steps, which specify the
resolution of the space and time grids, respectively, that are used in the
simulation. Entering lower values for the Expanding grid factor and the
Potential steps parameter or higher value for the Time Grid Factor
will increase the resolution of the grid, which may increase the accuracy of
the simulation. However, there is a point beyond which further increases in
resolution will have no effect. Increasing the grid resolution will also
increase the time required for the calculation, but this is generally no longer
an issue with the speed of PCs now available. There are two occasions when
decreasing the Space Expanding grid factor is useful, and these are discussed
in later chapter (see Chapter
7 How Do You Know It is Right?).
5.2.6 Design Waveform panel:
You can design your waveform that is applied to electrodes by setting your time-potential values here. This section is only visible for the Technique 9) Design waveform.
t0 is the start time, t0=0 second; E0 is the start potential (V).
t1 is the first point of time to change potential; E1 is the first changed potential.
t2 is second point of time to change potential; E2 is the second changed potential
and so on.
You can see its waveform by click on the Waveform menu of the Plot menu.
Default value is double steps scan.
You can type in your mechanism in the Digital Simulation panel with any symbol. Upper case symbol is different from lower case symbol. In order to faster computation, you should type in reactants only without products if chemical reaction is irreversible.
Tick the checkbox under Adsorb for adsorption reaction. The
adsorptive system assumes that the adsorption obeys Langmuir isotherm and all
species can be adsorbed. For non-adsorptive species, set its adsorption
coefficient value to 0.
Uncheck the Digital Simulation
checkbox, you will see the Analytical Simulation panel. In the Analytical Simulation panel, you choose a predefined mechanism. Although the electron number and
reactant and product numbers are inside the Digital Simulation panel,
they are for both Digital and Analytical Simulations. You can input any value
of the electron number (n), e.g. n = -0.5.
Some of about 20 predefined
mechanisms are as follows:
A+ne = B charge reaction
A+ne <-> B reversible charge reaction
A(a)+ne = B(a) Langmuir adsorption reaction
A(a)+ne <-> B(a) reversible Langmuir adsorption reaction
It is used to enter thermodynamic and kinetic parameters for the reactions involved in the mechanism. The following must be defined for each (Heterogeneous) electron transfer reaction:
Heterogeneous Reaction Section:
ks: heterogeneous standard rate constant (cm/s).
a: electron transfer
coefficient.
E°: standard electrode potential (V).
Three parameters
are required for each chemical (Homogeneous) reaction: the
equilibrium constant (Keq), and the rates of the forward and reverse
reaction (kf and kb). Only two parameters kf and kb can
be defined by the user, since Keq = kf/ kb.
Homogeneous Reaction Section:
kf: forward chemical reaction rate constant. Its unit is /s for the
first order reactions, or /sM for second order reactions. Its value is up to
1e300.
kb: backward chemical reaction rate
constant. Its value is up to 1e300
Keq: chemical equilibrium constant,
Keq = kf / kb.
Solution
Section:
Electrolyte: electrolyte in solution.
C: concentration of electrolyte
(M).
pH: the pH value of solution. The
default value is 7.
Vs: volume of solution (ml).
The Species
Parameters are entered in this dialog box. These are the diffusion
coefficients (D) and concentrations of all the species involved in the
redox mechanism. Two concentrations are shown here. The user enter the analytical concentrations (C anal), which are
corresponding to the bulk
concentrations that in the solution. The
initial concentrations (C init) are the equilibrium
concentrations at the electrode surface, and are determined by E start,
all Eo values, all Keq values, and all C anal values. It is
the C init values rather than the Canal values that are used in
the simulation. The calculation of the C init values can be switched off
by disabling the Pre-Equilibration in its checkbox. If the
calculation of C init is disabled, the Canal values are the same as C init.
Species panel:
C
anal: analytical concentration (M).
C init: initial concentration at equilibrium (M).
This concentration is used for simulation and theoretical calculation.
C fitted: fitted value of
concentration (M).
C min: minimum concentration for
fitting (M). The minimum value usually is 0.1 time initial value.
C max: maximum concentration for
fitting (M). The minimum value usually is 10-time initial value.
D: diffusion coefficient (cm2/s). The default value is
10^-5.
D fitted: fitted value of diffusion
coefficient (cm2/s).
D min: minimum diffusion coefficient
(cm2/s) for fitting. The minimum value usually is 0.1 time initial
value.
D max: maximum diffusion coefficient
(cm2/s) for fitting. The minimum value usually is 10-time initial
value.
b: Adsorption coefficient (/M). The default values of all
species are 10^4. For non-adsorptive species, set its value to 0.
Gm: Maximum adsorption amount (mol/cm2). The default value is 10^-8.
Pre-equilibration checkbox:
When this option is enabled, it automatically assumes that all the chemical and electrochemical reactions in the vicinity of the electrode surface are in equilibrium as determined by the thermodynamic parameters: chemical equilibrium constant Keq, the standard potential E°, and by the starting electrode potential Estart. Then, the entered values of analytical concentrations are not identical to the corresponding initial concentrations.
It is a good idea to keep the pre-equilibration option enabled. When the pre-equilibrated and analytical concentrations are different significantly, the initial condition for the experiment and the simulation may not be what was expected. The degree, to which the pre-equilibrated concentrations may be considered to be the bulk concentrations, will depend upon time of pre-equilibration (i.e., the time between setting the starting potential and initiating the potential scan), the operative kinetics, and the geometry. The value of the initial concentrations will act as if they are the bulk concentrations. A reasonable assumption only if the electrode geometry does not produce steady-state diffusion and if the pre-equilibration time is much longer than the duration of experiment.
When the pre-equilibration is not selected, the pre-equilibrated and analytical concentrations are the same.
A simplest way
to run simulation is just to click the Run menu and then the Simulate
submenu. It uses the default values to simulate a linear sweep voltammogram. You
can change technique
under the Technique menu, or change mechanism in
the Mechanism window under the Mechanism menu, or
change instrumental parameters in the Instrument windows under the Instrument
menu, kinetic parameters in the Kinetic window under the Kinetic
menu, or concentration and coefficients parameters in the Concentration
window under the Concentration menu. You have choice for digital or analytical
simulation by clicking the Digital Simulation checkbox in the Mechanism window. The analytical simulation is fast, and
useful for comparison of digital simulation.
Notice that some
menu (e.g. the Plot menu and the Analyze
menu) will be activated only after run simulation or load data because they
require data.
This software can simulates the effects with changing over 30 factors, e.g. charge current, resistance, noise, preconcentration time, preconcentration potential, convection, pH, the reactant number, and product numbers, standard redox potentials, rate of electron transfer, transfer coefficient, concentration, diffusion coefficient, forward and reverse chemical reaction rate constants, temperature, electrode area, and experimental parameters, etc.
This software
can simulate many cases shown in the book: "Electrochemical Methods,
Fundamentals and Applications", by AJ Bard [6].
A simple reversible charge reduction
reaction at a planar electrode by cyclic linear sweep technique (CV) is assumed
here, otherwise stated.
Click the Mechanism menu to open a Mechanism
window, tick the “pH effect” checkbox, change the number of H+
in the charge reaction, and then click the OK button to close the Mechanism
window. Click the Kinetics menu to open a Kinetics window, change
the pH value in the Solution section, and then click the OK
button to close the window. Run the simulation. You should see the peaks shift
when pH is larger or less than 7. As the pH value increases, the peak shifts to
more negative potential. For a charge reaction
a A + h H+ + ne
= b B
where a
is the reactant number, b is the product numbers, h is the number
of H+, and n is the electron number. The relationship of the
peak position with the pH value usually is linear:
Ep
= k1 - k2 pH
Where k1
and k2 are constants. k2 depends on the electron number, the
number of H+, the numbers of reactant and product, and temperature. For
a=b, it becomes
Ep
= k1- RTh/nF pH
For a=b
and h=n, it becomes
Ep
= k1- 0.059 pH
It shows
that both peaks in CV shift to 59 mV more negative potential per pH. These agree
with the theoretical equation (2.5).
As the hydrogen ion number h
increases from 1 to 2, the peak shift increase from 60 to 120 mV more negative
potential per pH. These agree with the above theoretical equation.
For a charge reaction
a A + ne = b B
where a
is the reactant number, b is the product number, and n is the
electron number. If you change the reactant and/or product number of charge reactions, you should see the current changes.
As the product number increases,
e.g. the reaction A+e=2B, its current becomes lower and broader, the peak
shifts about 10 mV more negative.
As the reactant number increases,
e.g. the reaction 2A+e=B, its shape is the same as above reaction, and its
location and half-peak width are the same as above reaction, but the current
height is half.
For the reaction 2A+e=2B, its peak becomes
more lower and broader. It is the same as the reaction A+0.5e=B, because the former
reaction becomes to the latter reaction by division of the former reaction by
2. Its peak current is 0.5^1.5=0.35 lower than the peak current in the
one-electron reaction A+e=B, which agrees with the theoretical value in the eq.
(2.8). Its peak potential Ep= E1/2 - 0.06 V, which is agree with the
theoretical eq. (2.9). This is double of the peak movement to more negative in
the one-electron reaction. Its half-peak width |Ep/2 – Ep|=0.11 V,
which agrees with the theoretical value in the eq. (2.11). This is double of
the half-peak width 0.055 V in the one-electron reaction.
For the charge reaction 2A+2e=2B, its current
is the same as the current for the reaction A+e=B. This agrees with the eq.
(2.5).
If you change the
electron number of charge reactions in Digital Simulation section for
both Digital and Analytical Simulation, you should see that peak
height increases and peak width decreases as the electron number increases. For LS technique at a planar
electrode, its peak current increases, which agrees with the eq. (2.8), its peak
potential shifts to more negative, which agrees with the eq. (2.9), and its
half peak width decreases, which agrees with the eq. (2.11).
If you change sign of electron number to
negative, then reactant A becomes a reduced species, product B
becomes an oxidized species, and the reaction becomes oxidation.
You not only simulate the effect of negative electron number, but also simulate the effect of fraction of electron number. E.g. electron number is 0.5.
Run two simulations for A+0.5e=B and 2A+e=2B. They are the same, which agrees with theory, as reaction A+0.5e=B is the same as 2A+e=2B.
You can simulate the effects of over
10 electrode geometries. Currents at different electrode geometries are
different as their diffusion models are different. By keeping the same area of
the electrodes, the peak current at the cylindrical electrode is larger than
the peak current at the planar electrode. The peak current at the spherical
electrode is larger than the peak current at the cylindrical electrode. These
agree with theoretical equations.
Note that the
planar electrode geometry is not available for microelectrodes. For
larger planar electrodes, there is the edge effect, but it has little
effect on the over-all performance because the edges are small compared to the
area of the plane. As the electrode gets smaller, the relative
contribution of the edge becomes more important. A very small electrode,
relative to the thickness of the diffusion layer, behaves as if it is all edge.
Not only the electrode geometry has effects on shape of current, but also the electrode size does. When the electrode size is very small, e.g. electrode radius is 1e-4 cm, its current becomes the S-shape from the peak shape, and steady-state current at the spherical electrode in LS technique is 1.2e-9 A, which agrees with the eq. (2.4). The steady-state current at the micro disc electrode in LS technique is 3.86e-10 A, which agrees with the eq. (2.4).
A shape of
linear scan voltammogram at spherical electrodes is changed from
peak shape to S-shape. When the products of scan rate and radius, v r >
10-5, the shape is peak. When v r < 10-7,
the shape is wave. The
steady-state current is independence of the time factors, e.g. the scan rate,
the electrode-rotating rate, the pulse time, the drop time, or the sampling
time.
The peak current increases linearly
with the electrode area for planar electrodes, or with square of the electrode radius
for planar disk electrodes. But it increases linearly with square root of the electrode
area or with the electrode radius for microelectrodes, regardless of electrode geometry,
spherical or disk electrodes. This agrees with theoretical equations.
For the
rotating electrodes, current
increases as the electrode rotating speed increases, and the limit current
increases linearly with square root of the electrode rotating speed, which agree
with theoretical equations. When the ratio of rotating
speed to scan rate, w/v < 1,
the shape is peak. When high-speed w/v > 103,
the shape becomes S-shape wave. If
you set the rotation speed to 0, the current should become one without
rotation.
For a thin film electrode,
surface modified electrode or thin layer cell, its current shape is peak-shape
as it is finite diffusion. Its behaves are similar to adsorption reaction at plane
electrodes. Its peak current increases linearly with scan rate.
For LS and CV techniques at a planar
electrode in simple reversible and irreversible charge reactions, the peak
current increases linearly as square root of scan rate increases, which agree
with the eq. (2.8).
In reversible and irreversible adsorption
reactions, the peak current increases linearly with increasing scan rate. So adsorption
current increases more rapid than diffusion current. But in quasi-reversible
reaction, these relationships are not linear anymore.
In catalytic reaction, the limit current is
independent of scan rate.
For reversible charge and adsorption
reactions, the peak location and the width at half peak are independent of scan
rate. For irreversible charge and adsorption reactions, the widths at half peak
are still independent of scan rate, but the peak locations are not. The
reduction peak location shifts linearly to more negative potential and the
oxidization peak location shifts linearly to more positive potential as log of
scan rate increases. Therefore, the separation between the reduction and
oxidization peaks becomes larger as scan rate increases. These agree with
theoretical equations.
For square wave and additive
square wave techniques, the peak current increases linearly as square root of
frequency increases.
At a microelectrode, the
steady-state currents are independent of the time factors (e.g. the scan rate,
the electrode-rotating rate, the drop time, the pulse time, or the sampling
time) for all LS, DC, and normal pulse techniques, which agree with the
theoretical equations.
For a reduction reaction, the
scan direction is from positive to negative, i.e. the start potential is large
than the ending potential, so the current is positive.
For an oxidation reaction, the
scan direction is from negative to positive, i.e. the start potential is less
than the ending potential, so the current changes to negative.
The current in second cycle is
different from current in first cycle. But the current in third cycle is close
to the current in second cycle. So, third cycle is enough.
For anode stripping voltammetry, set the preconcentration potential -0.2/n V more to species’
standard electrode potential, the start potential of sweep to –0.3 V and the end potential to 0.3 V.
For cathode stripping voltammetry, set the preconcentration potential 0.2/n V more to species’ standard electrode
potential, the start
potential of sweep to 0.3 V and the end potential to -0.3 V.
Select the Preconcentration checkbox in the Instrument window.
Change
the preconcentration time in the t pre field. The preconcentration time
usually is a number of minutes. If you increase the preconcentration time, e.g. from 600 second to 1000 second, the peak
current increases, but the peak current will have a limit. If you set the
preconcentration time to 0, you should see that the current is the same as one
without preconcentration. You should enter your
mercury film thickness into the Length field in the Electrode
section of the Instrument
window if you use a planar mercury film electrode.
Select
the Preconcentration checkbox in the Instrument
window. Change the preconcentration potential value in the E pre field. If you increase the preconcentration
potential, e.g. from 0
to –0.3 V for the standard electrode potential of 0.1 V, the peak current increases, but the peak
current will have a limit. It reaches the limit when the
preconcentration potential value usually is -0.2/n V to species’ standard electrode
potential for anode
stripping or 0.2/n V for cathode stripping. E.g. you further increase the preconcentration
potential, e.g. from –0.3
to –0.4 V, the current will not increase anymore.
For a simple charge reaction, as the
bulk concentration of reactant increases, the peak currents increase linearly, but
the peak locations do not change, which agrees with the theoretical equations.
But for adsorption reaction, the peak
current increases linearly in lower concentration, then increase slowly
nonlinearly, finally reach a limit at high concentration, which agrees with the
theory because it reaches maximum adsorption.
In differential pulse and square
wave voltammetry, for small pulse, the peak currents increase linearly but
resolutions become poor with increasing pulse height, which agrees with the
theoretical equations. For large pulse, the increasing of the peak currents is
not linear anymore.
But for additive square wave voltammetry,
the pulse height has a little effect.
In pulse voltammetry, as the pulse
width increases, the peak or limiting current decreases. This agrees with the
theoretical equations.
For normal pulse and different
pulse, square wave techniques, the limiting or peak current decreases linearly
as square root of pulse time increases, which agrees with the eq. (2.2).
As the sampling time decreases, the peak or
limiting current increases, but the charge current increases as well. This
agrees with the theoretical equations. The sampling time usually is larger than
or equal to 0.6. In Staircase voltammetry,
the peak potentials shift to positive potential as well. For additive
square-wave voltammetry, you can change the first sampling time different from
the second sampling time to offset charge current to zero. But the sampling
time does not affect steady-state current at the microelectrode.
You can simulate virtually any waveform techniques in voltammetry and chronoamperometry. You can design or import your waveform. You see the waveform applied to electrodes by click on the E vs t menu of the Plot menu.
From current shape point of view, techniques
in voltammetry can be divided into three types:
1. The first type is S-shape. E.g. DC and normal pulse voltammograms, steady-state current.
2. The second type is peak shape. E.g. differential pulse and square wave voltammograms. But there is
effect of the DC term on differential pulse voltammogram. When you click the i s vs E
menu, you will see these pulse current and DC current.
3. The third type is the peak tailor shape. E.g.
LS, CV, additive square wave, and staircase techniques. Their current shapes
usually are the peak tailor shape, but depend on scan rate, electrode geometry,
electrode size, reaction mechanism, etc. The pulse currents in square wave
technique are the same as the current in the staircase technique
when pulses become zero, which agree with theory.
The change in the ratio of diffusion coefficient
DA/DB leads to the potential shift. It shows that the
peak potential shifts to more positive as the ratio increases. This agrees with
theoretical equation dE/d ln(DA/DB) = RT/(2nF). However,
the height of the reverse peak almost does not change, although a very small
change occurs because of the changing relative position of Eend and
Epeak.
When the ratio = 4, the surface
concentration of product at end is double of the surface concentration of
reactant at the beginning. When the ratio = 1/4, the surface concentration of
product at end is half of the surface concentration of reactant at the
beginning.
For catalytic mechanism
A+e = B,
C+B->A
Assume that its charge reaction
is reversible, chemical reaction is irreversible, the concentration of species
C is much larger than the concentration of species A, and chemical reaction
rate is very large.
The currents in LS, CV,
staircase, and additive square wave techniques become S-shape from peak-shape.
The limiting current increases
linearly with square root of the chemical reaction rate, but is independence of
the time factors, e.g. the scan rate, the electrode rotating rate, the drop
time, the pulse time, or the sampling time. It is similar to the steady-state
current. This agrees with the theoretical equations. For digital simulation, if
you set both chemical reaction rates kf = 0 and kb = 0, it becomes to a simple
charge reaction without catalytic mechanism.
For above catalytic reaction, the
limiting current increases linearly with square root of the concentration of catalyst
species C. This agrees with theory.
For DC, NPV and DPV techniques,
the limiting or peak currents decrease linearly as square root of the drop time
increases, which agrees with the eq. (2.2).
For EC reactions A+e=B, B=C, a reverse peak
decreases as the forward chemical reaction rate kf increases. But
the reverse peak comes back as the backward chemical reaction rate kb
increases to equal to or larger than kf. You can change the rate up
to 10^300.
If the heterogeneous
standard rate constant ks is very large, e.g. 10^4, then the charge reaction is
reversible, and the heterogeneous standard rate constant has not any effect.
If the heterogeneous
standard rate constant is very small, e.g. 10^-4, then the charge reaction is
irreversible, and the heterogeneous standard rate constant has effect on the
peak position only, as the standard potential. For irreversible charge reaction, the
reverse peak is lower than the reduction peak, but for irreversible adsorptive
reaction, both peaks are the same height if the value of a is 0.5.
The adsorptive system assumes that all adsorptions obey Langmuir isotherm and all species can be adsorbed. For non-adsorptive species, set its adsorption coefficient value to 0.
For reversible adsorption reaction, the forward and reverse currents are symmetric peaks in the same location and same height. The reverse current looks like mirror of forward current.
For non-reversible adsorption reduction reaction, the forward and reverse currents are not symmetric peaks in the same location anymore. The forward current peak moves to negative direction, while its reserve current peak moves to positive direction. So the peak separation becomes larger as the rate ks becomes smaller. This agrees with theoretical equations.
Adsorption voltammogram is similar
to thin-layer or thin film electrode one as all they are surface reactions. .
In the book by Bard [6]:
Case 1. For the Section 12.5.2 "Cyclic
Voltammetry: Only Adsorbed O and R
Electroactive - Nernstian Reactions" in page 521 of the book, you just
tick on the select
box "Adsorb" in the Mechanism window, and click on the RUN menu.
Case 2. For the section 12.5.3 "CV: Irreversible Reaction" in page
523 of the book, it is similar to above Case 1, but you should change kf to
very small value, e.g. 1e-3.
Case 3. For section 12.5.4 "CV: Both Dissolved and Adsorbed Species
Electroactive" in page 525 of the book, its mechanism can be
A + e = B
O + e = R (adsorption reaction)
A = O, K=1
Parameters
are K=1, E1=E2, adsorption coefficients of species A and B are 0.
(a) Product (R)
Strongly Adsorbed.
Change the
adsorption coefficient of product R to
1e6, the adsorption coefficient of reactant O
to 1e4. You should see CV is similar to the Figure 12.5.4 in the page
527 of the book.
As scan
rate increases, adsorption peak becomes higher.
(b) Reactant (O) Strongly Adsorbed.
Change the
adsorption coefficient of reactant O to 1e6,
the adsorption coefficient of product R to
1e4,
(c) Reactant (O) Weakly Adsorbed.
Other
parameters: adsorption coefficient of species R = 0, adsorption coefficient of species O = 1e3. As scan rate increases, adsorption peak becomes higher.
(d) Product (R) Weakly Adsorbed.
Other
parameters: adsorption coefficient of species O = 1e-3, adsorption coefficient of species R = 1e3. As scan rate increases, adsorption peak becomes higher.
For reversible adsorption reaction with equal adsorption coefficients of reactant and product, peak location is at the halt-wave potential and half-peak width is 90/n mV. For strong adsorption, the adsorption coefficient affects the peak location, but did not change peak high. When adsorption coefficient of product is larger than adsorption coefficient of reactant, then peaks move to positive direction. When adsorption coefficient of product is smaller than adsorption coefficient of reactant, then peaks move to negative direction.
For irreversible adsorption reduction reaction, adsorption coefficients affect both peak high and location.
You
can set its adsorption coefficient value to 0 if species is non-adsorptive.
The concentrations do not affect the adsorption peak current when adsorption reaches its maximum.
The strong adsorption current increases linearly with scan rate. So, the adsorption current increases more than the non-adsorption current with scan rate. But it is not linearly anymore for weak adsorption.
The transfer
coefficient does not affect on any reversible reaction.
For irreversible
charge reactions, as the value of the transfer coefficient increases, the
reduction peak is
higher and narrower, and the oxidized peak is lower and wider. These agree with theory.
For both square wave voltammetry and additive square wave voltammetry, the currents increase linearly with square root of frequency. These agree with theory.
Current decreases, the positive peak shifts a little bit to negative, and the negative peak shift a little bit to positive as temperature increases. These agree with theory.
As resistance increases, both forward and backward currents in CV decrease and the peak separation increases. These agree with theory.
As the double layer capacitance increases, the baseline current increases. These agree with theory.
The combination of capacitance and resistance lead that baseline is not linear anymore because they induce a non-constant dE/dt.
After run
simulation, click the Plot menu, and then click the C0 vs E
submenu to show surface concentrations. The concentrations at the electrode surface
are useful for checking accuracy of simulation.
For a reduction reaction A+e=B, the
concentration of reactant decreases and the concentration of product increases
as potential moves to more negative since scan. The concentration of reactant
decreases to zero and the concentration of product increases to the same as initial
concentration of reactant at the end of scan. Because all amount of species A
becomes the same amount of B at the end of scan. Their concentrations cross at
the half wave potential. These agree with the theoretical eq. (2.5).
For a reduction reaction A+e=2B, the
concentration of reactant decreases to zero and the concentration of product
increases to double of initial concentration of reactant at the end of scan,
which agrees with theory because one molecular of species A produces two
molecular of species B.
For a reduction reaction 2A+e=B, the
concentration of reactant decreases to zero and the concentration of product
increases to half of initial concentration of reactant at the end of scan,
which agrees with theory because two molecules of species A produce one
molecular of species B.
For EE reactions A+e=B, B+e=C, it is
interesting to see the maximum surface concentration of the species B is lower
than the species A or C.
For EE reactions A+e=2B, B+e=2C, the
maximum surface concentration of the species C is double of the species B, and
the maximum concentration of the species B is double of the species A, which
agrees with theory, because one molecular of species A produces two molecules
of species B and two molecules of species B produces four molecules of species
C.
For EE reactions 2A+e=B, 2B+e=C, it is opposite to the above reaction.
For effect of diffusion coefficient,
see chapter 6.1.12 Effect of Diffusion Coefficient.
The surface concentrations look like
the same in reversible simple reaction, regardless of scan rate, electrode size, electrode geometry, and techniques if pulse height is zero, digital
simulation, and analytical simulation. For NPV and DPV, the surface
concentrations move in the pulse potential. For square wave and additive square
wave techniques, the surface concentrations move in half the pulse potential.
You also can check accuracy of
simulation by converting surface concentration to current or current to surface
concentration under the Convert submenu of the Plot menu.
After run first
simulation, click the Plot menu, and then the Option submenu.
Select the Overlap checkbox, and then run second simulation. You can change color and line
styles for individual curves. This software can compare up to six curves.
This software can analyze the x-y data for peak location, peak height, peak width, convolution, deconvolution, semi-derivative, semi-integral, derivative, integral, curve fitting, and separating overlapped peaks and background current. Semi-derivative is useful for CV. It can change the asymmetric peak shape of CV into the symmetric peak for easy measurement.
Click the Analyze
menu and then the
The difficult part of a voltammetric experiment is extracting the chemical information from the current-voltage curve. Apart from very simplistic analysis, the measured current cannot be directly interpreted. This software can extract the chemical information from the whole current-voltage curve. It helps to get parameter values and mechanisms. Curve fitting to any electrochemical parameter is easy by click to select that parameter, and then click on the Manual Fit or Auto Fit menu.
In order to extract kinetic parameters, you can fit a simulation curve to another simulated or experimental curve. It can retrieve any of 30 parameters (e.g. concentration C, standard electrode potential E°, and the heterogeneous standard rate constant ks) from voltammogram by curve fitting. Select parameters that you want to fit, and input the initial, minimum and maximum values of the parameters. The minimum value usually is 0.1time initial value and maximum value usually is 10-time initial value. e.g. after run simulation with all default values, select a concentration, then change the C value from 1e-3 to 2e-3 in the Species section, click the Auto Fit menu. You will see the fitted value of 0.001 in the C fitted field next to the C text field. Notice that when you auto fit, you should not click on the OK button on the Chemicals window to close the Chemicals window, otherwise you will get the “Runtime error 6: overflow”. This bug is fixed since version 4.6.
You should
manual fit before auto fit. The manual fit shows how well your initial guesses
values work. If it diverged, you should change their initial values and/or
minimum and maximum values, and then try again. By the manual fit, you must change the initial
values every time of run.
One
of the key functions of this software is a fitting routine that optimizes
selected simulation parameters to provide the best fit between the experimental
and simulated voltammograms. Data is text file formats without header. There
are a number of important points to note:
It should also be stressed that the potential step (i.e., the
difference between adjacent potential values) must be constant throughout the
data set. We have observed that variation of the potential step value can cause
considerable problems with the fitting routine.
It is similar to
fit the simulated curves. Click the File menu, the Open submenu, the Cuurent Data submenu to select
your data file. But you should input your experimental
values of Estart, Eend, Estep,
etc. into the Experimental section. This software
requires that data are in SI unit and first peak is positive value. If your
experimental data are not, please convert your experimental data to in SI unit. E.g. click the Analyze menu, and then the 0.001Y
submenu to convert current from mA to A. After the
experimental data (text) files are selected and loaded into this software, the mechanism and parameter values are then entered, and the
parameters to be varied are selected. A parameter of start current in Baseline
section should be zero. Once these have been done, you can start
fitting operation by
clicking the Fit menu.
It is important
to note that any given voltammogram may be accurately simulated by more than one
mechanism and/or set of parameter values. Experimental measurements should
therefore be made over a wide range of parameter values. The most
common variables are scan rate and technique, although variation of concentration
and/or temperature can also be used. If one set of parameter values can
provide a good match between the experimental and simulated
voltammograms measured over a wide range of scan rates (and/or techniques), then this is good evidence that these parameter values are
correct. However, it does not prove that the correct mechanism and
parameter values have been selected. It is up to the user to determine whether the
selected mechanism and parameter values are chemically and electrochemically
reasonable (i.e., are they consistent with the results of electrochemical
studies on similar systems?). The sensitivity of the fit to variations in the
parameters values must also be investigated.
It should note that for irreversible charge
reactions, you cannot fit both the heterogeneous
standard rate constant and the standard electrode potential in the same time
because they become dependent each other, and they are coupled.
· For a simple reversible or nearly
reversible redox reaction, A + e = B, it is in principle reasonable to evaluate
Eo and D (= DA = DB)
from a single CV. Data over a range of
scan rates will confirm if it is diffusion control or not.
· If
the reaction is quasi reversible it also might be possible to obtain meaningful
values for ks and a from a
single CV. Here again, wisdom dictates that data from several CVs run over a
range of scan rates be used to evaluate ks and a.
· Parameter values may be coupled: Under
certain circumstances there may be an infinite number of combinations of values
of two (or more) parameters that effect identical (or virtually identical)
fits, e.g.:
For a simple charge reaction, A + e = B, the
values of Eo and the ratio DA / DB are coupled. This is
why it allows diffusion coefficient values to be linked during fitting-
unlinked there would be an infinite number of combinations of Eo values and DA
/ DB ratios that would effect identical CVs.
For a completely irreversible, A + e ->
B, the values of Eo and ks are coupled.
For an EC reaction, A + e = B with an effectively
irreversible chemical reaction B -> C by kf, and RT kf /
F|v| > 1, the values of Eo and kf are coupled.
The manifestation of coupling can be
· Non-convergence.
· Convergence to vastly different
parameter values depending upon the initially guessed values.
· Wide confidence limits on one or more of
the coupled parameters.
A
seemingly excellent fit of the experimental and simulated data does not warrant
high confidence in the value of any given parameter.
Suggestions for experiment:
· Obtain experimental data over a range of
scan rates, and vary the starting and reverse potentials.
· Run multiple cycles.
· Alter the chemical conditions, e.g.
change of concentrations of reactants, pH.
· Vary the electrode size.
· Use known values for parameters.
Suggestions for simulation:
· Change the initially guessed values of
the optimized parameters to confirm that the optimized values remain the same.
· If you suspect that an optimized
parameter is playing a minor role, de-select it, and explore the effect of set
it at several different values while the remaining parameters are optimized.
· Be aware of sources of systematic error,
e.g., uncompensated resistance, capacitance; edge effects; adventitious
stirring.
· Attempt to optimize the minimum number
of parameters required for a reasonable
fit.
For multi charge reactions, overlapped
peaks are usually observed. There are errors in determination of peak height
and position in each reaction as the overlapped peaks. It is necessary to
separate overlapped peaks into individual peaks and check accuracy of
simulation. If you click the Manual Separate submenu under the Run
menu, you will see individual peaks. Click the
Because double layer capacitor and
resistance, there is background current such as charge current. This software
provides two ways to separate Faradic current from background current.
1. To
simulate current with background current, click the Input menu, the Instrument
submenu, change the value of Cd to 0.0001 and the value of
resistance R to 10000 in the Baseline section, and run simulation. You
should see current with baseline. When click the Manual Separate menu,
you should see third curve for the Faradic current without background current.
2. To
simulate background current, click the Input menu, the Instrument
submenu, change the value of Cd to 0.0001, the value of resistance R
to 1000 in the Baseline section and the value of the concentration C to
0 in the Concentration window, and run simulation. You should see
background current. Then, select the Overlap checkbox in the Option
window, change the value of the concentration C to 1e-3 in the Concentration
window, and run simulation. You should see second curve for current with
background current. Finally, click the Plot menu, the Y Data
submenu, and the Y2-Y1 submenu. You should see third curve for the
Faradic current without background current.
Any simulation procedure has its stability
and accuracy limitations. This software provides five ways to check for accuracy of simulation:
1. The first
approach is to compare peak values of simulated voltammograms with theoretical values. Uncheck
the Digital Simulation checkbox to change to Analytical Simulation, select your
mechanism, and then click the
2. The second method is
to compare digital
simulation voltammograms with analytical simulation voltammograms. E.g. in order to compare digital simulation of adsorptive
reversible reaction
with analytical simulation of reversible adsorptive reaction and general adsorptive
reaction, run digital simulation of adsorptive reaction, click the Overlap
checkbox in the Option menu of the Plot menu, uncheck the Digital Simulation
checkbox to see the Analytical Simulation, select the mechanism 15, run
simulation, select the mechanism 17, run simulation, you will see 3 curves
overlap together.
3. The third
approach is to change the computational parameters. The exponential
time and space grids used by the implicit finite difference computation are
characterized by t and x. Although these parameters are not defined explicitly
in the user interface, changing the potential steps, and the space
expanding grid factor in the Instrument window respectively can alter their values.
Decreasing the values of these parameters almost always improves the accuracy
of a given simulation, but the computation time is also increased. This software sets default values for these parameters that will produce
acceptable accuracy (e.g.
better than 0.5%) in most cases. However, there are
instances where the particular set of the used parameter values causes computational
problems. Decreasing
the values of one or both of these Model Parameters can eliminate this problem. It is possible to obtain a simulated voltammogram that looks
reasonable but is still inaccurate. It is good practice to run any simulation
using different values for the expanding grid factor and the potential steps to check for accuracy. A significant difference in the results indicates that the default
values are inadequate for accurate simulation. Because the smaller values of
the potential step and/or space expanding grid factor will effect a noticeably
longer computation time, we should use the possible largest values, which
retain acceptable accuracy.
4. The fourth method is to check
the concentration at the electrode surface, and to convert surface
concentration to current or current to surface concentration. See Section
2.6 Surface Concentration.
5. The fifth way is to check the
separated individual currents for multi charge reactions by the Separate
menu.
You
can combine any of these five ways to check for
accuracy of
simulation.
Q: How much
does registration cost?
A: Its membership is from $10 per year.
Shareware version $10 + $10
per function (except $100 for the function of the import experimental data, and
auto fit $70) per year per copy. Some functions must be ordered together. Please
state what function you want when you order. E.g. for a full package of all
functions is $480: Basic (Shareware) version $10 + import data $100 + export data
$10 + 10 techniques $100 + manual fit $10 + auto fit $70 + manual separate $10
+ auto separate $10 + open parameter file $10 + save parameter file $10 + 5
charge reactions $50 + 9 chemical reactions $90 = $480. It is Australian
dollar.
It is recommended
that you try shareware version on a computer where you want to work before you
buy. You cannot change hard disk drive where it was installed after password is
given.
Q: Which
platforms can the program run on?
A: Its 32-bit version program runs on IBM
PC under Windows 95/98/NT/2000/XP/Vista, while its 16-bit version program
runs under Windows 3/3.1/3.11/95/98/NT.
The 32-bit version needs Microsoft Visual Basic 6 runtime DLL files (e.g. msvbvm60.dll, comdlg32.ocx) in the same directory as the program or in the directory \windows\system for Windows 3.11 or 95, or in the directory \winnt\system32 for Windows NT.
The 16-bit version needs Microsoft Visual Basic 4 runtime DLL files (e.g. vb40016.dll and oc25.dll) in the same directory as Polar or in the directory \windows\system for Windows 3.1, or in the directory \winnt\system for Windows NT.
Q: I cannot save a file.
A: You miss the Microsoft Visual Basic 6 runtime DLL file comdlg32.ocx or you did not register.
Q: Where can I download these dll?
A: Microsoft Visual Basic 6 runtime DLL files are from http://www.simtel.net/simtel.net/win95/dll.html, where msvbvm60.dll is inside simvb6-5.zip. Microsoft Visual Basic 4 16-bit runtime DLL files are from http://www.simtel.net/simtel.net/win3/dll.html.
Q: When I click
the Simulate menu, I got error: “No data”, or "Run-time error 13”,
with the message: "Type mismatch".
A: I guess you are running it under non-English version of Windows. Please change language setting to English in the Regional Setting of the Control Panel, and restart Polar. Or try it under English version of Windows. Some non-English versions of Windows have problem to run English version program.
Q: Still have
install problem?
A: You should close all programs (include Office, Mail)
before install the
program. If you still have problem, try to register
file msvbvm60.dll by double click or type following command in DOS:
Cd \windows\system
Regsvr32 msvbvm60.dll
then start Polar.
Q: Why are some
menus inactive?
A: Some menus will be activated only after you click
the Simulate menu or load data because they need data.
Q: I cannot see
any chemical reaction in Shareware version. Is this part of the program not
finished yet or is it only available in the registered version?
A: It is only available in the registered versions.
You can change chemical reaction rate kf up to 1025.
The registered versions simulate virtually any mechanisms.
Q: Does it
include my mechanism?
A: If your mechanism is missing, please send your
requirement into author. Author may add your mechanism into new version special
for you.
Q: Can it fit
data by curve fitting?
A: Yes. Click to select a parameter that you want to
fit, and then click the Auto Fit menu.
Q: Can I change
graph into other program Spreadsheet Excel?
A: Yes. You export data in text file, and then read
data into it.
Q: Some
submenus semi-derivative, semi-integral, derivative, and integral, seem to not
work sometime. How can I do?
A: You should first click the Next submenu under the
Plot menu, then try semi-derivative submenu.
Q: How can I
get registered version?
A: You will receive it if you pay author registration
fee.
Q: What are
differences among Shareware, Student, Teacher, Academics and Professional
versions?
A: The Shareware version is for try before you buy, the
Student version is for students, the Teacher version is for teachers, the
Academic version is for academics, and the Professional version is for
professionals. Please see Table 1 Feature for details.
Q: When I run
the SWV with default conditions, it does not appear to give the correct curve.
Why?
Because default conditions are for linear sweep and CV
only. For
Q: Is it possible to click on a point and then have
displayed both the current and potential for the point?
A: Yes, since version 4.7.
Q: How to
simulate oxidation reaction?
A: change the scan potential to the Estart < the Eend in the Instrument window.
Q: When I click on the Auto Fit menu, I got “Runtime error 6: Overflow”. Why? How to fix it?
A: Because you close the Chemicals window. When you auto fit, you should not click on the OK button on the Chemicals window to close the Chemicals window, otherwise you will get the “Runtime error 6: overflow”. It has been fixed since version 4.6.
Q: Is it
licensed for user or machine?
A: Software is like hardware. If you want to use different PC, you had to buy different machines. Can you just buy a single machine in order to use different PC? Many users can share one machine. It is the same as many users can share one copy of software. Therefore, the software license is for machine, not for user. One copy of software is for one machine. If you want to use software for different PC, you should buy more copies of software, and you will get discount.
Q: What happen
when I upgrade machine?
A: When you upgrade the hardware of machine, you can change motherboard, CPU, RAM, add hard disk, but it is suggested that you should keep your old hard disk and never format it, so your software ID does not change, it will still work. You can put old hard disk into external hard disk box with USB connected to new PC.
Q: What data format can be imported?
A: The x-y pairs of text data. Please see Chapter 6.6.2 Fitting to Experimental Curve.
Q: How does it
compare to competitors?
A: This software has many advantages over
competitors (see details on the feature table in Chapter 2 Features). Some
advantages are as follows:
1. Competitor only digitally simulates a single technique CV at 5 electrode geometries, while this software analytically and digitally simulates virtually any waveform technique at over 10 electrode geometries.
2. Competitor cannot design or import waveform while this software can.
3. Competitor cannot simulate adsorption while this software can.
4. Competitor cannot simulate very fast chemical reaction rate larger than 1e20, while this software can simulate chemical reaction rate up to 1e300.
5. Competitor cannot simulate reactions with reactant or product number, e.g. 2A+e=B, while this software can.
6. Competitor cannot simulate reactions with fraction of electron number, e.g. A+0.5e=B, while this software can.
7. Competitor cannot separate overlapped peaks, while this software can.
8. Competitor cannot simulate effect of pH, while this software can, and even simulates over 30 effect factors.
9. Competitor cannot calculate any theoretical value, while this software can calculate over 1000 types of theoretical peak values.
10. Competitor cannot analyze data, while this software can.
11. Competitor cannot check simulation accuracy, while this software can by five ways of checking.
12. You download and try this software free.
13. This software is more powerful but cheaper.
Q: I still have
questions.
A: Please post your
questions to Electrochemistry Forum in website www.electrochemistry.net.